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Wikipedia

Kamisese Mara

Ratu Sir Kamisese Mara, CF, GCMG, KBE (6 May 1920 – 18 April 2004) was a Fijian politician, who served as Chief Minister from 1967 to 1970, when Fiji gained its independence from the United Kingdom, and, apart from one brief interruption in 1987, the first Prime Minister from 1970 to 1992. He subsequently served as President from 1993 to 2000.

Kamisese Mara
President of Fiji
In office
16 December 1993 – 29 May 2000
Acting: 16 December 1993 – 18 January 1994
Prime MinisterSitiveni Rabuka
Mahendra Chaudhry
Ratu Tevita Momoedonu
Preceded byRatu Sir Penaia Ganilau
Succeeded byFrank Bainimarama
Head of the Interim Military Government
2nd First Vice-President of Fiji
In office
2 June 1992 – 15 December 1993
PresidentRatu Sir Penaia Ganilau
Prime MinisterSitiveni Rabuka
Preceded byRatu Sir Josaia Tavaiqia
Succeeded byRatu Sir Josaia Tavaiqia
4th Leader of the Opposition (Fiji)
In office
13 April 1987 – 14 May 1987
Governor GeneralRatu Sir Penaia Ganilau
Preceded byHarish Sharma
Succeeded byVacant
1st Prime Minister of Fiji
In office
10 October 1970 – 13 April 1987
MonarchElizabeth II
Governors GeneralSir Robert Sidney Foster
Ratu Sir George Cakobau
Ratu Sir Penaia Ganilau
Preceded byHimself
As Chief Minister
Succeeded byTimoci Bavadra
In office
5 December 1987 – 2 June 1992
PresidentRatu Sir Penaia Ganilau
Preceded byVacant
Succeeded bySitiveni Rabuka
1st Chief Minister of Fiji
In office
20 September 1967 – 10 October 1970
MonarchElizabeth II
GovernorSir Derek Jakeway
Sir Robert Sidney Foster
Preceded byNone (new office)
Succeeded byHimself
As Prime Minister
Personal details
Born6 May 1920
Lomaloma, Vanua Balavu, Colony of Fiji
Died18 April 2004(2004-04-18) (aged 83)
Suva, Fiji
Resting placeTubou, Lakeba, Fiji
CitizenshipFijian
NationalityBritish subject
To 1970
Political partyAlliance Party
Spouse(s)Ro Lady Lala Mara (nee Tuisawau)
9 September 1950 – 18 April 2004 (his death)
Children4 daughters, 3 sons; including Koila Nailatikau, Ateca Ganilau, Elenoa Mara-Rasova, Finau Mara, Tevita Mara (son)[1]
Parent
Alma materUniversity of Otago
London School of Economics
Wadham College, Oxford
ProfessionEconomist

Early life and education: 1920 to 1950

Ratu Sir Kamisese Kapaiwai Tuimacilai Uluilakeba Mara was born on 6 May 1920, in Sawana, Lomaloma, Vanuabalavu in the archipelago of Lau, the son of Ratu Tevita Uluilakeba, Tui Nayau and head of the chiefly Vuanirewa clan of Tubou, Lakeba and Lusiana Qolikoro from the Fonolahi Family of the Yavusa Tonga clan in Sawana. Fonolahi has lineage to the Tongan royalty and was also descended from an English missionary.[citation needed]

Mara's title, Ratu, which means "Chief," was hereditary; as the hereditary Paramount Chief of the Lau Islands, he held the titles of Tui Lau in 1963, and Tui Nayau kei Sau ni Vanua ko Lau in 1969. He succeeded to the Tui Nayau title in 1969, following the death of his father in 1966. He was earlier installed as Tui Lau in 1963 following the traditional consultation process between the Yavusa Tonga in Sawana, Lomaloma and the Tui Nayau his father. Though the title Tui Lau is not hereditary it has been left vacant by his cousin¹ Ratu Sir Lala Sukuna, who had died in 1958.[citation needed]

Ratu Mara was first educated at Primary in Levuka (Sacred Heart Convent) than to Lau Provincial school before he left for his secondary education in an all boys boarding school in North of Tailevu (Queen Victoria School), he later moved to Marist Brothers High School Suva and Sacred Heart College, Auckland. He then attended the University of Otago in New Zealand, where he studied medicine (1942 to 1945). He never finished his medical studies, because his great-uncle and mentor, Ratu Sir Lala Sukuna (who was then regarded as Fiji's paramount chief), seeking to groom him for future leadership of the nation, arranged for him to study history at Wadham College, Oxford in the United Kingdom. Mara was distressed to abandon his medical studies, but, dependent on Ratu Sukuna for financial support, followed his orders without question, and graduated with an MA in 1949. In 1961, he returned to the United Kingdom to pursue postgraduate study at the London School of Economics for a Diploma in Economics and Social Administration, which he was awarded in 1962. In 1973, his old alma mater, Otago University, awarded him an honorary doctorate of laws (LL.D).[citation needed]

Following his graduation from Oxford University, Mara returned to Fiji and had married Ro Litia Cakobau Lalabalavu Katoafutoga Tuisawau, better known as Ro Lady Lala Mara, on 9 September 1950. Her title, Ro, is also hereditary and is held by Rewan chiefs; like her husband, Ro Lala was a chief in her own right, as the Roko Tui Dreketi (Paramount Chief) of Burebasaga and Rewa. The marriage was initially opposed by some members of Mara's family, as Ro Lala was from a rival dynasty with which the Mara clan had a history of strained relations. The marriage proved to be a happy one, however, and in stark contrast to the prevalence of divorce among many of Mara's relatives, it lasted for more than 53 years. They had three sons and five daughters, two of whom have pursued political careers of their own. Their eldest son, Ratu Finau Mara, was a Cabinet Minister and parliamentary leader of the Fijian Association Party from 1996 to 1998, when he resigned to take up a diplomatic posting. Their second daughter, Adi Koila Mara Nailatikau, has also followed in her father's footsteps and has served her country as a career diplomat and politician. She was Minister for Transport and Tourism in 1999 and 2000, and served in the Fijian Senate from 2001 to 2006.[citation needed]

The making of a statesman: 1950 to 1970

After serving (from 1950) as an Administrative Officer in the Colonial Services, Mara was nominated to one of five seats on the Legislative Council reserved for ethnic Fijians in 1953. (There were ten other seats, five reserved for Indians and five for Europeans and other minorities; a further sixteen members were appointed by the colonial Governor). In 1959, Mara was appointed to the Executive Council, and in 1963 was given responsibility as Leader of Government Business and Member for Natural Resources (officially an advisor to the Governor, but in reality roughly equivalent to a modern cabinet minister). In 1964, he was received into the Great Council of Chiefs, which at that time was empowered to appoint two members to the Legislative Council. In 1966, he founded the Alliance Party, which, supported overwhelmingly by the ethnic Fijian and European communities (but not by most Indo-Fijians), won a majority of the seats in the 1966 election. In preparation for independence, the United Kingdom introduced the Westminster (Cabinet) system of government to Fiji in October 1967. The Executive Council was transformed into a modern Cabinet, and its members, who had hitherto been answerable only to the colonial Governor, were made fully responsible to the legislature. Mara was named to the new position of Chief Minister.[citation needed]

One problem that threatened to delay independence was the failure of ethnic Fijians and Indo-Fijians to agree on a post-independence Constitution. Ethnic Fijians, including Mara, wanted a communal franchise, with parliamentary seats reserved for the different ethnic groups, who would vote on separate electoral rolls. It was believed that this would protect indigenous Fijian rights. Mara also considered that it was in Fiji's interests to avoid direct competition between political candidates from different ethnic groups, fearing that it would lead to social and political upheaval. Most Indo-Fijians rejected this proposal, believing that it would prevent them from obtaining a legislative majority, even though they numbered more than half of the population, and demanded that all Parliamentary seats should be elected by universal suffrage from a common voters' roll. In April 1970, Mara and Sidiq Koya, leader of the mainly Indo-Fijian National Federation Party, met in London and negotiated a compromise. Fijians and Indo-Fijians would be represented equally in the House of Representatives, with 22 seats each; a further 8 seats would be set aside for Europeans and other minorities. About half of the representatives from each ethnic group would be elected only by members of their particular race, while the other half would be elected by universal suffrage. Following this agreement, Fiji became independent on 10 October 1970.[citation needed]

Prime Minister of Fiji: 1970 to 1992

With independence, the office of Chief Minister was renamed Prime Minister, but its functions were substantially unchanged. Mara retained power in the first post-independence election of 1972. Internal divisions within the ethnic Fijian electorate led to the narrow defeat of his Alliance Party by the Indo-Fijian dominated National Federation Party (NFP) in the election of March 1977. He tendered his resignation as Prime Minister, but the NFP splintered three days later in a leadership dispute, and a constitutional crisis developed. The official representative of Queen Elizabeth, Governor-General Ratu Sir George Cakobau, ended up calling on Mara to form a new government. Although unquestionably constitutional, the Governor-General's actions were controversial. Many Indo-Fijians were outraged at what they saw as a deliberate cynical move on his part to keep the government of Ratu Mara, his fellow-chief (and distant cousin) in power at all costs. A subsequent election to resolve the impasse in September that year, however, appeared to vindicate Cakobau, when the Alliance Party won a record 36 seats out of 52.[citation needed]

 
Mara visiting the United States (1984)

The Alliance Party's majority was reduced in the 1982 election, but with 28 of the 52 seats, Mara retained power. Despite the loss of eight seats, the popular vote for the Alliance Party rose to 51.8% – an all-time record. Part of the reason for this paradox lay in the distribution of the vote: the gains in the popular vote occurred mostly because of a swing of almost 10% in the 11 "communal" seats reserved for, and elected exclusively by, Indo-Fijians, but 24% of the Indo-Fijian vote was insufficient to translate into parliamentary seats, and therefore did not effectively offset small but very significant losses in ethnic Fijian "communal" seats. It was therefore a bittersweet election for Mara.[citation needed]

Convinced of the need to include Indo-Fijians in the government, he proposed a "government of national unity" – a grand coalition with the National Federation Party. The NFP, however, rejected the offer and remained in opposition. In the election of 1987, Mara was finally defeated by a multiracial coalition led by Dr Timoci Bavadra. His retirement was to be short-lived, however. Two military coups led by Lieutenant Colonel Sitiveni Rabuka seriously undermined the social and economic stability, and the international prestige, of Fiji. Mara was recalled to head an interim administration, with a view to restoring Fiji's international reputation and rebuilding the country's shattered economy. In 1992, he handed over power to an elected government.[citation needed]

President of the Republic: 1993 to 2000

After the military coups of 1987, Fiji had severed its links with the Monarchy and become a republic, with a president and two Vice-Presidents chosen by the Great Council of Chiefs. Following his retirement as Prime Minister, Mara was elected to the Vice-Presidency in June 1992, and became Acting president soon after, when the ailing president Ratu Sir Penaia Ganilau was incapacitated. He assumed the office of President officially when Ganilau died on 16 December of the following year. Modelled on the Monarchy, the presidency filled a largely honorary role, but was nevertheless vested with important reserve powers, to be used only in the event of a national crisis.[citation needed]

That crisis came on 19 May 2000, with the Fiji coup of 2000. Gunmen led by George Speight forced their way into Parliament and kidnapped the Prime Minister, Mahendra Chaudhry, several Cabinet ministers, and a number of parliamentarians. Speight declared himself Prime Minister, and ordered Mara to step aside as president. Mara refused to negotiate with the plotters, and decided instead to dismiss the kidnapped government and assume emergency powers himself. His move backfired, however. In what politicians called "a coup within a coup," Ratu Mara was whisked away on the naval ship Kiro on 28 May, where he was allegedly approached by a group of present and former military and police officers and ordered to suspend the Constitution. When he refused, ("If the Constitution goes, I go," he defiantly declared) the group, including the army commander, Commodore Frank Bainimarama, former Prime Minister and 1987 Coup Leader Sitiveni Rabuka, former military commander Ratu Epeli Ganilau (a son-in-law of Mara's), and a former Police Commissioner Isikia Savua, are alleged to have asked for, and possibly forced, Mara's resignation. He was subsequently taken to his home island of Lakeba in the Lau Islands. For the 80-year-old president, who was seen as the father of the country and had led it, in one capacity or another, for more than 40 years, it was an anticlimactic end.[citation needed]

The military regime that took over appointed Ratu Josefa Iloilo, who had been Mara's vice-president, to succeed him on 13 July 2000. After the coup had been quashed, the Supreme Court ruled on 15 November that year that Mara's replacement was unconstitutional and ordered his reinstatement, but Mara, wishing to spare the country further constitutional trauma, officially resigned, with his resignation retroactive to 29 May 2000.

On 29 April 2001, Mara publicly accused the police chief, Colonel Isikia Savua and former Prime Minister, Sitiveni Rabuka, of instigating the coup. In what was to be his last public interview, Mara claimed that George Speight – who was then in custody and has since been convicted of treason – was only a front, Mara told Close-Up on Fiji Television that he confronted Savua and Rabuka two days after the coup about their possible involvement. "I could see it in their faces," said Mara, emphatically rejecting their denials.[citation needed]

Mara told the programme that within half an hour of Speight's forcible occupation of the Parliament, Rabuka had telephoned Government House (the official residence of the president) to offer to form a government.[citation needed]

Mara said that he was shocked to learn that the Counter Revolutionary Warfare Unit of the Army had been involved in the coup. He alleged that they took George Speight to Parliament, and that their senior officers supplied them with weapons, blankets, and food. Mara also declared that the Counter Revolutionary Warfare officers who joined Speight's coup had trained on a farm owned by Rabuka. Excerpts of this interview were broadcast on 29 April 2001; the full interview was not broadcast until 29 April 2004 – while his body was lying in state in preparation for his funeral.[citation needed]

Whether Mara's resignation was in fact forced has been the subject of a police investigation since 21 May 2003, when the Police Investigations Department confirmed that they had opened an investigation into the events surrounding his departure from office. Mahendra Chaudhry, the deposed Prime Minister, has publicly supported Mara's version of events, and has further alleged that Mara was blackmailed with a threat to kill his daughter, Tourism Minister Adi Koila Nailatikau, who was one of the hostages. Commodore Bainimarama has defended his role in the incident saying it was "necessary" at the time, and that Mara's resignation was, in fact, voluntary and that he had refused offers of reinstatement. Mara's daughter, Adi Ateca Ganilau (wife of Ratu Epeli Ganilau) appeared to support Bainimarama's claims in a statement on 10 January 2005, saying that her father had resigned and had refused to return because he was upset by the abrogation of the Constitution. "He did not agree with the abrogation of the Constitution. That was probably why he refused to return to office. It was not that the military pressured him to move out," Ganilau said. She called for a thorough investigation into the abrogation of the Constitution, and for those who were legal advisers at the time to be answerable for their actions.[citation needed]

Police have said they have faced "many challenges" in their investigation, finding many officers uncooperative. On 30 April 2004, the Fijian police said they were closely examining the recording of Mara's last interview, in an attempt to uncover new leads. Police spokesman Mesake Koroi declared that there was a lot of hearsay and rumours in circulation that would not stand up in a court of law. "Unfortunately we are hitting a brick wall in our investigations at the moment," Koroi said. On 2 May 2005, however, Commodore Bainimarama agreed to make a statement to the police about his own role in Mara's resignation. Police Commissioner Andrew Hughes said that no charges could be brought against Commodore Bainimarama unless it could be proved that he had actually forced the president to resign. On 5 January 2006, Hughes said that Mara's departure from the Presidency was one of seven major cases the police were still working on.[citation needed]

Evaluation

Sugarcane industry

Under Mara's leadership, Fiji became a giant in sugarcane production. Between 1970 and 1987, the sugarcane crop more than doubled, from under 250,000 tonnes to 502,000. The sugar industry continues to be the mainstay of Fiji's economy, and more than 90% of Fiji's sugar is exported. Mara's government led the way in negotiating special preferential marketing agreements with nations importing Fijian sugar, through the Lome Convention.[citation needed]

Pine industry

Mara also founded Fiji's pine industry. Today, pine plantations, virtually nonexistent 40 years ago, cover close to 480 square kilometres throughout the Fiji Islands, and there is an ongoing programme to further expand area in all parts of the country. Fiji now derives more than $40 to 50 million a year in foreign exchange earnings from its forestry sector. Of this total, more than half is from pinewood chips exports. This industry now provides a substantial and increasing source of income to those in rural areas, including especially the indigenous Fijian landowners.[citation needed]

International achievements and honours

In the 1960s, Mara led a revolt by Pacific Islands delegates that brought about a restructuring of the South Pacific Commission. He also helped to launch the Pacific Islands Producers' Association and the South Pacific Forum, both associations of Pacific nations, of which Fiji was a founder member.[citation needed]

Yet another significant Mara achievement was his contribution to the negotiations that led to the signing of a new United Nations International Law of the Sea Convention in 1982.[citation needed]

On the global stage, Mara was known for his strongly pro-American views. He supported visits to Fijian ports by nuclear-armed United States warships and submarines. He was a close ally of US President Ronald Reagan. Mara was also known for his support for Taiwan. Although he did not officially recognise the Republic of China, he never hid the fact that his true sympathies lay there, and the Taipei regime, in gratitude, helped to finance the publication of his memoirs.[citation needed]

Over the years, Mara received many honours from around the world. In addition to his knighthood (a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire (KBE), awarded in 1969), his honours from Queen Elizabeth II included the Meritorious Service Decoration, the Officer of the Order of the British Empire (1961), Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George (1983), Chancellor of the Order of Fiji, Companion of the Order of Fiji, and Knight Grand Cross of the Pian Order with Star (1995). He was also a member of the Privy Council in London beginning in 1973. Recognitions from other governments included being made a Grand Master of the Order of the National Lion in Dakar, Senegal in 1975, and the Order of Diplomatic Service Merit of South Korea in 1978. He was also a Knight of the Most Venerable Order of St John, and became Chancellor of the University of the South Pacific at Suva, which was founded with the support of his government. In 2000, Island Business Magazine named him Pacific Man of the Century, in recognition of his pivotal role in the founding of the South Pacific Forum.[citation needed]

Criticisms

There were criticisms of his leadership, too, some of which he eventually acknowledged. Many Indo-Fijians criticised him for not doing more to thwart the 1987 coups which removed an Indo-Fijian dominated administration from office, and for giving his consent to a new constitution, drafted in 1990, which guaranteed indigenous Fijian supremacy and was widely regarded as racist, even drawing comparisons from some quarters with South Africa's apartheid system. Mara defended his role in the post-coup era of 1987 to 1992, arguing that he was doing the best he could in circumstances that he could not fully control, and that it had seemed better at the time to connive in the writing of a discriminatory constitution than to risk civil war at the hands of ethnic Fijian extremists. In 1996, he publicly apologised to the Indo-Fijian community for his role in the drafting of the 1990 Constitution. Mahendra Chaudhry, the leader of the Indo-Fijian community who in 1999 became Fiji's first Indo-Fijian Prime Minister, said that he did not agree with, but understood, Mara's reasons for acting as he did, and accepted his apology for having done so. Other opponents, both Indo-Fijian and ethnic Fijian, were less forgiving, however.[citation needed]

Sitiveni Rabuka, who led the 1987 coup, surprised many in 1999 when he claimed in an autobiography that he had carried out the coups at Mara's behest. Mara retaliated by suing him for defamation. Mahendra Chaudhry said that he did not believe that Mara had been involved.[citation needed]

Not all of Mara's critics were Indo-Fijian. George Speight, a commoner (i.e., one of non-chiefly ancestry) who led the 2000 putsch accused Mara of selling the country out to Indo-Fijians, and of working to keep power in the hands of a coalition of Fijian chiefs and Indo-Fijian businessmen, at the expense of Fijian commoners.[citation needed]

Later life and death

Following his resignation, Mara retired to his native island of Lakeba. He continued to influence politics in Fiji, where democracy was subsequently restored, through his membership of the Great Council of Chiefs, which not only advised the government but also functioned as an electoral college to choose the President of the Republic, as well as 14 of the 32 members of the Senate; at the time of his death, he was the longest-serving member of the Council.[2] He remained Chairman of the Lau Provincial Council, a position he had held concurrently with his national offices for many years.[citation needed]

Mara suffered a stroke late in 2001 while visiting Port Vila, Vanuatu, with two of his longtime friends, businessmen Hari Punja and Joe Ruggiero. He died in Suva on 18 April 2004, from complications arising from the stroke. His state funeral, led by Roman Catholic Archbishop Petero Mataca, which was spread out over three days (28 to 30 April) saw an estimated 200,000 people – almost a quarter of Fiji's total population – line the streets to pay their last respects to the man they regarded as the father of the nation, in an outpouring of public grief not seen since the death of Mara's presidential predecessor, Ratu Sir Penaia Ganilau, over a decade earlier.[citation needed]

Legacy

Even in death, Ratu Mara stirred controversy. His state funeral was by no means universally popular, even among his close supporters. Claiming to speak for many of those who had been close to the late president, Joseph Browne, who had been his official secretary, claimed that it was the "height of hypocrisy" to have the armed forces, still commanded by the same officers who had unceremoniously deposed Mara from the presidency four years earlier, honouring him at his funeral now.[citation needed]

A one-year period of mourning for the late Chief ended on 13 May 2005, with the close of a series of ceremonies that started on the 9th. Those who had been observing mourning rituals symbolically changed from black clothes into their normal attire. (Members of the Mara family, however, said that they would continue to wear black for a further three months, until the period of mourning for his wife, Adi Lala, is over). Thousands of people arrived in the chiefly village of Tubou on the island of Lakeba to take part in the vakataraisulu ritual, which lifted taboos in place for the Mara family and the people of the Lau Islands. Mara's son, Ratu Finau Mara, who is widely expected to be named his successor as Tui Nayau, or Paramount Chief of the Lau Islands, was expected to participate in the vakataraisulu at the request of elders from Tubou and Levuka, but for undisclosed reasons, remained in Suva. In 2004, he had attended his father's state funeral in Suva but not his private funeral in Lakeba. His younger brother, Roko Tevita Uluilakeba, was believed to be out of the country.[citation needed]

Addressing the Lau Provincial Council in Ratu Mara's honour, Fiji's current vice-president, Ratu Joni Madraiwiwi praised him as a man of vision and compassion, who hated lies and lived by the truth. He praised him as a committed Christian who practised what he preached, and who did not differentiate between people but treated all men alike whatever their race or religion. Madraiwiwi called on all Lauans to follow Mara's example.[citation needed]

Another controversy was reported by the Fiji Times on 8 January 2006. His family was displeased, his daughter Adi Ateca Ganilau told the Times, that the same government that was working to release from prison persons convicted of offences related to the coup which deposed him, was also promoting an independent biography to be written by Australian academic Derrick Scarr, formerly of the Australian National University. This was contradictory, she said. "On one hand they want to praise him but on the other they are working to free those people who ousted him through the Reconciliation Bill," she said, referring to controversial legislation introduced by the Fijian government in 2005, aimed at establishing a Commission empowered to propose amnesty for coup-convicts. She reiterated her previously stated opposition to the release of coup-perpetrators, saying that he father would not have stood for it if he were alive.[citation needed]

Jioji Kotobalavu, the chief executive officer of the Prime Minister's Department, rejected the criticism, saying that the government was not financing the book and that its involvement was limited to ensuring that Scarr had access to information sources. He considered that co-operation in the writing of the biography would be a fitting tribute to Ratu Mara, whom he called a great man. The Mara family should discuss any reservations with Scarr himself, Kotobalavu said.[citation needed]

Cricket

Mara played two first-class matches for Fiji against Otago and Canterbury in Fiji's 1953/54 tour of New Zealand. After scoring 44 runs against Canterbury he broke his arm, curtailing both his tour, in which he served as vice-captain, and first-class career.[citation needed]

In his two first-class matches Mara scored 64 runs at a batting average of 21.33, with a high score of 44. A right-arm fast-medium bowler, with the ball he took 8 wickets at a bowling average of 17.12, with best figures of 4/77.[citation needed]

Mara also played 8 non-first-class matches for Fiji from 1954 to 1956, with his final match for Fiji coming against the West Indies in Fiji's famous 28 run win over them, a match in which he captained Fiji to victory.[citation needed]

Personal life

Mara's interests included cricket, rugby, golf, athletics, and fishing. Mara is cousins with one of Fiji's famous cricketer's, I.L. Bula. He was a member of the Achilles Club in London, the Defence Club in Suva, and the United Oxford and Cambridge Universities Club in the United Kingdom. Mara's character was described as a combination of the forthright and the diplomatic, the inflexible and the dexterous, the imperious and the tolerant. He was known as a strong, imposing personality, but with an ability to forgive his opponents. A convert to Catholicism, Mara wrote of his faith: "Certainly it has been the rock on which I have been able to rely in good times and in bad, and it is the lodestone of my life." He wrote an autobiography, The Pacific Way: A Memoir. Mara was survived by his wife, Adi Lala (who herself died on 20 July the same year), and by two sons and five daughters; one son predeceased him.[citation needed]

Political offices
Preceded by
None (new office)
Chief Minister of Fiji
1967–1970
Succeeded by
Himself
As Prime Minister
Preceded by
Himself
As Chief Minister
Prime Minister of Fiji
1970–1987
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Harish Sharms
Leader of the Opposition
1987
Succeeded by
Vacant
Preceded by
Vacant
Prime Minister of Fiji
1987–1992
Succeeded by
Preceded by First Vice-President of Fiji
1992–1993
Succeeded by
Preceded by Acting
President of Fiji

1993–1994
Succeeded by
Himself
As substantive President
Preceded by
Himself
As Acting President
Acting
President of Fiji

1994–2000
Succeeded by
Frank Bainimarama
Head of the Interim Military Government
Preceded by
Chairman of the Lau Provincial Council
?-2004
Succeeded by
Ratu Josefa Basulu
Titles of nobility
Preceded by Tui Lau
1964–2004
Succeeded by
Vacant
Preceded by
Ratu Tevita Uluilakeba
Tui Nayau
1969–2004
Succeeded by
Vacant
  • †In Mara's time, the office of Vice-President was held simultaneously by two individuals; Mara's tenure coincided with that of Ratu Sir Josaia Tavaiqia (1992 to 1997). Tavaiqia was already First Vice-President, serving alongside Inoke Takiveikata as Second Vice-President; Takiveikata resigned in Mara's favour, and Tavaiqia moved to the post of Second Vice-President to allow Mara to assume that of First Vice-President.

See also

  • Elenoa Mara-Rasova

References

  1. ^ "Lauan Chiefs Happy With Ratu Finau Appointment | Fiji Sun". fijisun.com.fj. Retrieved 11 April 2017.
  2. ^ "Ratu Sir Kamisese Mara, Fiji's First Prime Minister, Dies at 83". New York Times. 19 April 2004. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
  • The World of Talk on a Fijian Island: An Ethnography of Law and Communicative Causation – Chapter 1 Pages 8,9 / Chapter 4, Page 56 By Andrew Arno Copyright 1993 by Alex Publishing, printed in the USA
  • The Years of Hope: Cambridge, Colonial Administration in the South Seas and Cricket Chapter 5 Page 103 –104 By Phillip A. Snow Published in 1997 by Radcliffe Press London
  • Pacific Art: persistence, Change and meaning Memorial Images of Eastern Fiji By Anita Herle Copyright 2002, University of Hawai'i Press
  • Mara, Ratu Sir Kamisese: "The Pacific Way: A Memoir", University of Hawai'i Press, 1997 – ISBN 978-0-8248-1893-7
  • 20th Century Fiji, edited by Stewart Firth & Daryl Tarte – 2001 – ISBN 982-01-0421-1

External links

  • Official death notice, tributes, and announcement of a state funeral (Heraldsun)
  • Transcript of ABC Radio report of Mara's death
  • Partial transcript of Ratu Mara's last interview, with Fiji Television, 29 April 2001
  • Kamisese Mara on Cricinfo
  • Kamisese Mara on CricketArchive
  • Swami Rudrananda's impact

kamisese, mara, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, january, 2013, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, r. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations January 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ratu Sir Kamisese Mara CF GCMG KBE 6 May 1920 18 April 2004 was a Fijian politician who served as Chief Minister from 1967 to 1970 when Fiji gained its independence from the United Kingdom and apart from one brief interruption in 1987 the first Prime Minister from 1970 to 1992 He subsequently served as President from 1993 to 2000 His Excellency The Right Honourable Ratu SirKamisese MaraCF GCMG KBEPresident of FijiIn office 16 December 1993 29 May 2000 Acting 16 December 1993 18 January 1994Prime MinisterSitiveni RabukaMahendra ChaudhryRatu Tevita MomoedonuPreceded byRatu Sir Penaia GanilauSucceeded byFrank BainimaramaHead of the Interim Military Government2nd First Vice President of FijiIn office 2 June 1992 15 December 1993Serving with Ratu Sir Josaia TavaiqiaSecond Vice President of FijiPresidentRatu Sir Penaia GanilauPrime MinisterSitiveni RabukaPreceded byRatu Sir Josaia TavaiqiaSucceeded byRatu Sir Josaia Tavaiqia4th Leader of the Opposition Fiji In office 13 April 1987 14 May 1987Governor GeneralRatu Sir Penaia GanilauPreceded byHarish SharmaSucceeded byVacant1st Prime Minister of FijiIn office 10 October 1970 13 April 1987MonarchElizabeth IIGovernors GeneralSir Robert Sidney FosterRatu Sir George Cakobau Ratu Sir Penaia GanilauPreceded byHimselfAs Chief MinisterSucceeded byTimoci BavadraIn office 5 December 1987 2 June 1992PresidentRatu Sir Penaia GanilauPreceded byVacantSucceeded bySitiveni Rabuka1st Chief Minister of FijiIn office 20 September 1967 10 October 1970MonarchElizabeth IIGovernorSir Derek JakewaySir Robert Sidney FosterPreceded byNone new office Succeeded byHimselfAs Prime MinisterPersonal detailsBorn6 May 1920Lomaloma Vanua Balavu Colony of FijiDied18 April 2004 2004 04 18 aged 83 Suva FijiResting placeTubou Lakeba FijiCitizenshipFijianNationalityBritish subjectTo 1970Political partyAlliance PartySpouse s Ro Lady Lala Mara nee Tuisawau 9 September 1950 18 April 2004 his death Children4 daughters 3 sons including Koila Nailatikau Ateca Ganilau Elenoa Mara Rasova Finau Mara Tevita Mara son 1 ParentTevita Uluilakeba III father Alma materUniversity of OtagoLondon School of EconomicsWadham College OxfordProfessionEconomist Contents 1 Early life and education 1920 to 1950 2 The making of a statesman 1950 to 1970 3 Prime Minister of Fiji 1970 to 1992 4 President of the Republic 1993 to 2000 5 Evaluation 5 1 Sugarcane industry 5 2 Pine industry 5 3 International achievements and honours 5 4 Criticisms 6 Later life and death 7 Legacy 8 Cricket 9 Personal life 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksEarly life and education 1920 to 1950 EditRatu Sir Kamisese Kapaiwai Tuimacilai Uluilakeba Mara was born on 6 May 1920 in Sawana Lomaloma Vanuabalavu in the archipelago of Lau the son of Ratu Tevita Uluilakeba Tui Nayau and head of the chiefly Vuanirewa clan of Tubou Lakeba and Lusiana Qolikoro from the Fonolahi Family of the Yavusa Tonga clan in Sawana Fonolahi has lineage to the Tongan royalty and was also descended from an English missionary citation needed Mara s title Ratu which means Chief was hereditary as the hereditary Paramount Chief of the Lau Islands he held the titles of Tui Lau in 1963 and Tui Nayau kei Sau ni Vanua ko Lau in 1969 He succeeded to the Tui Nayau title in 1969 following the death of his father in 1966 He was earlier installed as Tui Lau in 1963 following the traditional consultation process between the Yavusa Tonga in Sawana Lomaloma and the Tui Nayau his father Though the title Tui Lau is not hereditary it has been left vacant by his cousin Ratu Sir Lala Sukuna who had died in 1958 citation needed Ratu Mara was first educated at Primary in Levuka Sacred Heart Convent than to Lau Provincial school before he left for his secondary education in an all boys boarding school in North of Tailevu Queen Victoria School he later moved to Marist Brothers High School Suva and Sacred Heart College Auckland He then attended the University of Otago in New Zealand where he studied medicine 1942 to 1945 He never finished his medical studies because his great uncle and mentor Ratu Sir Lala Sukuna who was then regarded as Fiji s paramount chief seeking to groom him for future leadership of the nation arranged for him to study history at Wadham College Oxford in the United Kingdom Mara was distressed to abandon his medical studies but dependent on Ratu Sukuna for financial support followed his orders without question and graduated with an MA in 1949 In 1961 he returned to the United Kingdom to pursue postgraduate study at the London School of Economics for a Diploma in Economics and Social Administration which he was awarded in 1962 In 1973 his old alma mater Otago University awarded him an honorary doctorate of laws LL D citation needed Following his graduation from Oxford University Mara returned to Fiji and had married Ro Litia Cakobau Lalabalavu Katoafutoga Tuisawau better known as Ro Lady Lala Mara on 9 September 1950 Her title Ro is also hereditary and is held by Rewan chiefs like her husband Ro Lala was a chief in her own right as the Roko Tui Dreketi Paramount Chief of Burebasaga and Rewa The marriage was initially opposed by some members of Mara s family as Ro Lala was from a rival dynasty with which the Mara clan had a history of strained relations The marriage proved to be a happy one however and in stark contrast to the prevalence of divorce among many of Mara s relatives it lasted for more than 53 years They had three sons and five daughters two of whom have pursued political careers of their own Their eldest son Ratu Finau Mara was a Cabinet Minister and parliamentary leader of the Fijian Association Party from 1996 to 1998 when he resigned to take up a diplomatic posting Their second daughter Adi Koila Mara Nailatikau has also followed in her father s footsteps and has served her country as a career diplomat and politician She was Minister for Transport and Tourism in 1999 and 2000 and served in the Fijian Senate from 2001 to 2006 citation needed The making of a statesman 1950 to 1970 EditAfter serving from 1950 as an Administrative Officer in the Colonial Services Mara was nominated to one of five seats on the Legislative Council reserved for ethnic Fijians in 1953 There were ten other seats five reserved for Indians and five for Europeans and other minorities a further sixteen members were appointed by the colonial Governor In 1959 Mara was appointed to the Executive Council and in 1963 was given responsibility as Leader of Government Business and Member for Natural Resources officially an advisor to the Governor but in reality roughly equivalent to a modern cabinet minister In 1964 he was received into the Great Council of Chiefs which at that time was empowered to appoint two members to the Legislative Council In 1966 he founded the Alliance Party which supported overwhelmingly by the ethnic Fijian and European communities but not by most Indo Fijians won a majority of the seats in the 1966 election In preparation for independence the United Kingdom introduced the Westminster Cabinet system of government to Fiji in October 1967 The Executive Council was transformed into a modern Cabinet and its members who had hitherto been answerable only to the colonial Governor were made fully responsible to the legislature Mara was named to the new position of Chief Minister citation needed One problem that threatened to delay independence was the failure of ethnic Fijians and Indo Fijians to agree on a post independence Constitution Ethnic Fijians including Mara wanted a communal franchise with parliamentary seats reserved for the different ethnic groups who would vote on separate electoral rolls It was believed that this would protect indigenous Fijian rights Mara also considered that it was in Fiji s interests to avoid direct competition between political candidates from different ethnic groups fearing that it would lead to social and political upheaval Most Indo Fijians rejected this proposal believing that it would prevent them from obtaining a legislative majority even though they numbered more than half of the population and demanded that all Parliamentary seats should be elected by universal suffrage from a common voters roll In April 1970 Mara and Sidiq Koya leader of the mainly Indo Fijian National Federation Party met in London and negotiated a compromise Fijians and Indo Fijians would be represented equally in the House of Representatives with 22 seats each a further 8 seats would be set aside for Europeans and other minorities About half of the representatives from each ethnic group would be elected only by members of their particular race while the other half would be elected by universal suffrage Following this agreement Fiji became independent on 10 October 1970 citation needed Prime Minister of Fiji 1970 to 1992 EditWith independence the office of Chief Minister was renamed Prime Minister but its functions were substantially unchanged Mara retained power in the first post independence election of 1972 Internal divisions within the ethnic Fijian electorate led to the narrow defeat of his Alliance Party by the Indo Fijian dominated National Federation Party NFP in the election of March 1977 He tendered his resignation as Prime Minister but the NFP splintered three days later in a leadership dispute and a constitutional crisis developed The official representative of Queen Elizabeth Governor General Ratu Sir George Cakobau ended up calling on Mara to form a new government Although unquestionably constitutional the Governor General s actions were controversial Many Indo Fijians were outraged at what they saw as a deliberate cynical move on his part to keep the government of Ratu Mara his fellow chief and distant cousin in power at all costs A subsequent election to resolve the impasse in September that year however appeared to vindicate Cakobau when the Alliance Party won a record 36 seats out of 52 citation needed Mara visiting the United States 1984 The Alliance Party s majority was reduced in the 1982 election but with 28 of the 52 seats Mara retained power Despite the loss of eight seats the popular vote for the Alliance Party rose to 51 8 an all time record Part of the reason for this paradox lay in the distribution of the vote the gains in the popular vote occurred mostly because of a swing of almost 10 in the 11 communal seats reserved for and elected exclusively by Indo Fijians but 24 of the Indo Fijian vote was insufficient to translate into parliamentary seats and therefore did not effectively offset small but very significant losses in ethnic Fijian communal seats It was therefore a bittersweet election for Mara citation needed Convinced of the need to include Indo Fijians in the government he proposed a government of national unity a grand coalition with the National Federation Party The NFP however rejected the offer and remained in opposition In the election of 1987 Mara was finally defeated by a multiracial coalition led by Dr Timoci Bavadra His retirement was to be short lived however Two military coups led by Lieutenant Colonel Sitiveni Rabuka seriously undermined the social and economic stability and the international prestige of Fiji Mara was recalled to head an interim administration with a view to restoring Fiji s international reputation and rebuilding the country s shattered economy In 1992 he handed over power to an elected government citation needed President of the Republic 1993 to 2000 EditMain article Removal of Ratu Mara 2000 After the military coups of 1987 Fiji had severed its links with the Monarchy and become a republic with a president and two Vice Presidents chosen by the Great Council of Chiefs Following his retirement as Prime Minister Mara was elected to the Vice Presidency in June 1992 and became Acting president soon after when the ailing president Ratu Sir Penaia Ganilau was incapacitated He assumed the office of President officially when Ganilau died on 16 December of the following year Modelled on the Monarchy the presidency filled a largely honorary role but was nevertheless vested with important reserve powers to be used only in the event of a national crisis citation needed That crisis came on 19 May 2000 with the Fiji coup of 2000 Gunmen led by George Speight forced their way into Parliament and kidnapped the Prime Minister Mahendra Chaudhry several Cabinet ministers and a number of parliamentarians Speight declared himself Prime Minister and ordered Mara to step aside as president Mara refused to negotiate with the plotters and decided instead to dismiss the kidnapped government and assume emergency powers himself His move backfired however In what politicians called a coup within a coup Ratu Mara was whisked away on the naval ship Kiro on 28 May where he was allegedly approached by a group of present and former military and police officers and ordered to suspend the Constitution When he refused If the Constitution goes I go he defiantly declared the group including the army commander Commodore Frank Bainimarama former Prime Minister and 1987 Coup Leader Sitiveni Rabuka former military commander Ratu Epeli Ganilau a son in law of Mara s and a former Police Commissioner Isikia Savua are alleged to have asked for and possibly forced Mara s resignation He was subsequently taken to his home island of Lakeba in the Lau Islands For the 80 year old president who was seen as the father of the country and had led it in one capacity or another for more than 40 years it was an anticlimactic end citation needed The military regime that took over appointed Ratu Josefa Iloilo who had been Mara s vice president to succeed him on 13 July 2000 After the coup had been quashed the Supreme Court ruled on 15 November that year that Mara s replacement was unconstitutional and ordered his reinstatement but Mara wishing to spare the country further constitutional trauma officially resigned with his resignation retroactive to 29 May 2000 On 29 April 2001 Mara publicly accused the police chief Colonel Isikia Savua and former Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka of instigating the coup In what was to be his last public interview Mara claimed that George Speight who was then in custody and has since been convicted of treason was only a front Mara told Close Up on Fiji Television that he confronted Savua and Rabuka two days after the coup about their possible involvement I could see it in their faces said Mara emphatically rejecting their denials citation needed Mara told the programme that within half an hour of Speight s forcible occupation of the Parliament Rabuka had telephoned Government House the official residence of the president to offer to form a government citation needed Mara said that he was shocked to learn that the Counter Revolutionary Warfare Unit of the Army had been involved in the coup He alleged that they took George Speight to Parliament and that their senior officers supplied them with weapons blankets and food Mara also declared that the Counter Revolutionary Warfare officers who joined Speight s coup had trained on a farm owned by Rabuka Excerpts of this interview were broadcast on 29 April 2001 the full interview was not broadcast until 29 April 2004 while his body was lying in state in preparation for his funeral citation needed Whether Mara s resignation was in fact forced has been the subject of a police investigation since 21 May 2003 when the Police Investigations Department confirmed that they had opened an investigation into the events surrounding his departure from office Mahendra Chaudhry the deposed Prime Minister has publicly supported Mara s version of events and has further alleged that Mara was blackmailed with a threat to kill his daughter Tourism Minister Adi Koila Nailatikau who was one of the hostages Commodore Bainimarama has defended his role in the incident saying it was necessary at the time and that Mara s resignation was in fact voluntary and that he had refused offers of reinstatement Mara s daughter Adi Ateca Ganilau wife of Ratu Epeli Ganilau appeared to support Bainimarama s claims in a statement on 10 January 2005 saying that her father had resigned and had refused to return because he was upset by the abrogation of the Constitution He did not agree with the abrogation of the Constitution That was probably why he refused to return to office It was not that the military pressured him to move out Ganilau said She called for a thorough investigation into the abrogation of the Constitution and for those who were legal advisers at the time to be answerable for their actions citation needed Police have said they have faced many challenges in their investigation finding many officers uncooperative On 30 April 2004 the Fijian police said they were closely examining the recording of Mara s last interview in an attempt to uncover new leads Police spokesman Mesake Koroi declared that there was a lot of hearsay and rumours in circulation that would not stand up in a court of law Unfortunately we are hitting a brick wall in our investigations at the moment Koroi said On 2 May 2005 however Commodore Bainimarama agreed to make a statement to the police about his own role in Mara s resignation Police Commissioner Andrew Hughes said that no charges could be brought against Commodore Bainimarama unless it could be proved that he had actually forced the president to resign On 5 January 2006 Hughes said that Mara s departure from the Presidency was one of seven major cases the police were still working on citation needed Evaluation EditSugarcane industry Edit Under Mara s leadership Fiji became a giant in sugarcane production Between 1970 and 1987 the sugarcane crop more than doubled from under 250 000 tonnes to 502 000 The sugar industry continues to be the mainstay of Fiji s economy and more than 90 of Fiji s sugar is exported Mara s government led the way in negotiating special preferential marketing agreements with nations importing Fijian sugar through the Lome Convention citation needed Pine industry Edit Mara also founded Fiji s pine industry Today pine plantations virtually nonexistent 40 years ago cover close to 480 square kilometres throughout the Fiji Islands and there is an ongoing programme to further expand area in all parts of the country Fiji now derives more than 40 to 50 million a year in foreign exchange earnings from its forestry sector Of this total more than half is from pinewood chips exports This industry now provides a substantial and increasing source of income to those in rural areas including especially the indigenous Fijian landowners citation needed International achievements and honours Edit In the 1960s Mara led a revolt by Pacific Islands delegates that brought about a restructuring of the South Pacific Commission He also helped to launch the Pacific Islands Producers Association and the South Pacific Forum both associations of Pacific nations of which Fiji was a founder member citation needed Yet another significant Mara achievement was his contribution to the negotiations that led to the signing of a new United Nations International Law of the Sea Convention in 1982 citation needed On the global stage Mara was known for his strongly pro American views He supported visits to Fijian ports by nuclear armed United States warships and submarines He was a close ally of US President Ronald Reagan Mara was also known for his support for Taiwan Although he did not officially recognise the Republic of China he never hid the fact that his true sympathies lay there and the Taipei regime in gratitude helped to finance the publication of his memoirs citation needed Over the years Mara received many honours from around the world In addition to his knighthood a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire KBE awarded in 1969 his honours from Queen Elizabeth II included the Meritorious Service Decoration the Officer of the Order of the British Empire 1961 Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George 1983 Chancellor of the Order of Fiji Companion of the Order of Fiji and Knight Grand Cross of the Pian Order with Star 1995 He was also a member of the Privy Council in London beginning in 1973 Recognitions from other governments included being made a Grand Master of the Order of the National Lion in Dakar Senegal in 1975 and the Order of Diplomatic Service Merit of South Korea in 1978 He was also a Knight of the Most Venerable Order of St John and became Chancellor of the University of the South Pacific at Suva which was founded with the support of his government In 2000 Island Business Magazine named him Pacific Man of the Century in recognition of his pivotal role in the founding of the South Pacific Forum citation needed Criticisms Edit There were criticisms of his leadership too some of which he eventually acknowledged Many Indo Fijians criticised him for not doing more to thwart the 1987 coups which removed an Indo Fijian dominated administration from office and for giving his consent to a new constitution drafted in 1990 which guaranteed indigenous Fijian supremacy and was widely regarded as racist even drawing comparisons from some quarters with South Africa s apartheid system Mara defended his role in the post coup era of 1987 to 1992 arguing that he was doing the best he could in circumstances that he could not fully control and that it had seemed better at the time to connive in the writing of a discriminatory constitution than to risk civil war at the hands of ethnic Fijian extremists In 1996 he publicly apologised to the Indo Fijian community for his role in the drafting of the 1990 Constitution Mahendra Chaudhry the leader of the Indo Fijian community who in 1999 became Fiji s first Indo Fijian Prime Minister said that he did not agree with but understood Mara s reasons for acting as he did and accepted his apology for having done so Other opponents both Indo Fijian and ethnic Fijian were less forgiving however citation needed Sitiveni Rabuka who led the 1987 coup surprised many in 1999 when he claimed in an autobiography that he had carried out the coups at Mara s behest Mara retaliated by suing him for defamation Mahendra Chaudhry said that he did not believe that Mara had been involved citation needed Not all of Mara s critics were Indo Fijian George Speight a commoner i e one of non chiefly ancestry who led the 2000 putsch accused Mara of selling the country out to Indo Fijians and of working to keep power in the hands of a coalition of Fijian chiefs and Indo Fijian businessmen at the expense of Fijian commoners citation needed Later life and death EditFollowing his resignation Mara retired to his native island of Lakeba He continued to influence politics in Fiji where democracy was subsequently restored through his membership of the Great Council of Chiefs which not only advised the government but also functioned as an electoral college to choose the President of the Republic as well as 14 of the 32 members of the Senate at the time of his death he was the longest serving member of the Council 2 He remained Chairman of the Lau Provincial Council a position he had held concurrently with his national offices for many years citation needed Mara suffered a stroke late in 2001 while visiting Port Vila Vanuatu with two of his longtime friends businessmen Hari Punja and Joe Ruggiero He died in Suva on 18 April 2004 from complications arising from the stroke His state funeral led by Roman Catholic Archbishop Petero Mataca which was spread out over three days 28 to 30 April saw an estimated 200 000 people almost a quarter of Fiji s total population line the streets to pay their last respects to the man they regarded as the father of the nation in an outpouring of public grief not seen since the death of Mara s presidential predecessor Ratu Sir Penaia Ganilau over a decade earlier citation needed Legacy EditEven in death Ratu Mara stirred controversy His state funeral was by no means universally popular even among his close supporters Claiming to speak for many of those who had been close to the late president Joseph Browne who had been his official secretary claimed that it was the height of hypocrisy to have the armed forces still commanded by the same officers who had unceremoniously deposed Mara from the presidency four years earlier honouring him at his funeral now citation needed A one year period of mourning for the late Chief ended on 13 May 2005 with the close of a series of ceremonies that started on the 9th Those who had been observing mourning rituals symbolically changed from black clothes into their normal attire Members of the Mara family however said that they would continue to wear black for a further three months until the period of mourning for his wife Adi Lala is over Thousands of people arrived in the chiefly village of Tubou on the island of Lakeba to take part in the vakataraisulu ritual which lifted taboos in place for the Mara family and the people of the Lau Islands Mara s son Ratu Finau Mara who is widely expected to be named his successor as Tui Nayau or Paramount Chief of the Lau Islands was expected to participate in the vakataraisulu at the request of elders from Tubou and Levuka but for undisclosed reasons remained in Suva In 2004 he had attended his father s state funeral in Suva but not his private funeral in Lakeba His younger brother Roko Tevita Uluilakeba was believed to be out of the country citation needed Addressing the Lau Provincial Council in Ratu Mara s honour Fiji s current vice president Ratu Joni Madraiwiwi praised him as a man of vision and compassion who hated lies and lived by the truth He praised him as a committed Christian who practised what he preached and who did not differentiate between people but treated all men alike whatever their race or religion Madraiwiwi called on all Lauans to follow Mara s example citation needed Another controversy was reported by the Fiji Times on 8 January 2006 His family was displeased his daughter Adi Ateca Ganilau told the Times that the same government that was working to release from prison persons convicted of offences related to the coup which deposed him was also promoting an independent biography to be written by Australian academic Derrick Scarr formerly of the Australian National University This was contradictory she said On one hand they want to praise him but on the other they are working to free those people who ousted him through the Reconciliation Bill she said referring to controversial legislation introduced by the Fijian government in 2005 aimed at establishing a Commission empowered to propose amnesty for coup convicts She reiterated her previously stated opposition to the release of coup perpetrators saying that he father would not have stood for it if he were alive citation needed Jioji Kotobalavu the chief executive officer of the Prime Minister s Department rejected the criticism saying that the government was not financing the book and that its involvement was limited to ensuring that Scarr had access to information sources He considered that co operation in the writing of the biography would be a fitting tribute to Ratu Mara whom he called a great man The Mara family should discuss any reservations with Scarr himself Kotobalavu said citation needed Cricket EditMara played two first class matches for Fiji against Otago and Canterbury in Fiji s 1953 54 tour of New Zealand After scoring 44 runs against Canterbury he broke his arm curtailing both his tour in which he served as vice captain and first class career citation needed In his two first class matches Mara scored 64 runs at a batting average of 21 33 with a high score of 44 A right arm fast medium bowler with the ball he took 8 wickets at a bowling average of 17 12 with best figures of 4 77 citation needed Mara also played 8 non first class matches for Fiji from 1954 to 1956 with his final match for Fiji coming against the West Indies in Fiji s famous 28 run win over them a match in which he captained Fiji to victory citation needed Personal life EditMara s interests included cricket rugby golf athletics and fishing Mara is cousins with one of Fiji s famous cricketer s I L Bula He was a member of the Achilles Club in London the Defence Club in Suva and the United Oxford and Cambridge Universities Club in the United Kingdom Mara s character was described as a combination of the forthright and the diplomatic the inflexible and the dexterous the imperious and the tolerant He was known as a strong imposing personality but with an ability to forgive his opponents A convert to Catholicism Mara wrote of his faith Certainly it has been the rock on which I have been able to rely in good times and in bad and it is the lodestone of my life He wrote an autobiography The Pacific Way A Memoir Mara was survived by his wife Adi Lala who herself died on 20 July the same year and by two sons and five daughters one son predeceased him citation needed Political officesPreceded byNone new office Chief Minister of Fiji1967 1970 Succeeded byHimselfAs Prime MinisterPreceded byHimselfAs Chief Minister Prime Minister of Fiji1970 1987 Succeeded byHimselfTimoci BavadraPreceded byHarish Sharms Leader of the Opposition1987 Succeeded byVacantPreceded byVacant Prime Minister of Fiji1987 1992 Succeeded bySitiveni RabukaPreceded byRatu Sir Josaia Tavaiqia First Vice President of Fiji 1992 1993 Succeeded byRatu Sir Josaia TavaiqiaPreceded byRatu Sir Penaia Ganilau ActingPresident of Fiji1993 1994 Succeeded byHimselfAs substantive PresidentPreceded byHimselfAs Acting President ActingPresident of Fiji1994 2000 Succeeded byFrank BainimaramaHead of the Interim Military GovernmentPreceded by Chairman of the Lau Provincial Council 2004 Succeeded byRatu Josefa BasuluTitles of nobilityPreceded byRatu Sir Lala Sukuna Tui Lau1964 2004 Succeeded byVacantPreceded byRatu Tevita Uluilakeba Tui Nayau1969 2004 Succeeded byVacant In Mara s time the office of Vice President was held simultaneously by two individuals Mara s tenure coincided with that of Ratu Sir Josaia Tavaiqia 1992 to 1997 Tavaiqia was already First Vice President serving alongside Inoke Takiveikata as Second Vice President Takiveikata resigned in Mara s favour and Tavaiqia moved to the post of Second Vice President to allow Mara to assume that of First Vice President Wikiquote has quotations related to Kamisese Mara See also EditElenoa Mara RasovaReferences Edit Lauan Chiefs Happy With Ratu Finau Appointment Fiji Sun fijisun com fj Retrieved 11 April 2017 Ratu Sir Kamisese Mara Fiji s First Prime Minister Dies at 83 New York Times 19 April 2004 Retrieved 6 January 2022 The World of Talk on a Fijian Island An Ethnography of Law and Communicative Causation Chapter 1 Pages 8 9 Chapter 4 Page 56 By Andrew Arno Copyright 1993 by Alex Publishing printed in the USA The Years of Hope Cambridge Colonial Administration in the South Seas and Cricket Chapter 5 Page 103 104 By Phillip A Snow Published in 1997 by Radcliffe Press London Pacific Art persistence Change and meaning Memorial Images of Eastern Fiji By Anita Herle Copyright 2002 University of Hawai i Press Mara Ratu Sir Kamisese The Pacific Way A Memoir University of Hawai i Press 1997 ISBN 978 0 8248 1893 7 20th Century Fiji edited by Stewart Firth amp Daryl Tarte 2001 ISBN 982 01 0421 1External links EditIsland Business magazine names Mara Pacific Islands Man of the Century Official death notice tributes and announcement of a state funeral Heraldsun A brief sketch of Ratu Mara s life Daily Telegraph UK Transcript of ABC Radio report of Mara s death Partial transcript of Ratu Mara s last interview with Fiji Television 29 April 2001 The end of an era Islands Business May 2004 Details Ratu Mara and his Life Kamisese Mara on Cricinfo Kamisese Mara on CricketArchive Swami Rudrananda s impact Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kamisese Mara amp oldid 1152081376, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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